Jr's tehachapi prison documentary premieres in theaters across france


Jr's tehachapi prison documentary premieres in theaters across france

Play all audios:


JR’S FILM ‘TEHACHAPI’ IS COMING TO FRANCE In October 2019, JR received special permission to work at TEHACHAPI, one of California’s most violent maximum-security prisons. There, he


collaborated with 28 incarcerated men to create a giant MURAL that transformed the prison yard. JR’s new feature documentary, Tehachapi, follows these collaborative art projects over three


years, showing how art can bring hope, inspire change, and highlight the humanity within prison walls. Having first premiered at the 2023 Telluride Film Festival, Tehachapi is scheduled to


be released in theaters across France on June 12th, 2024. A selection of viewings will include post-screening discussions with JR and Kevin Walsh, a protagonist of the film who was formerly


incarcerated at Tehachapi. Tehachapi, pasting in the courtyard | image by Marc Azoulay ABOUT THE TEHACHAPI PROJECT In 2019, JR (find more HERE) visited Tehachapi to meet 28 incarcerated men


and propose a collaborative art project for the prison’s central yard. Many of these men had been imprisoned for nearly a decade, with many serving life sentences without parole. JR and his


team photographed each man from above, allowing them to share their stories on camera without any specific questions, giving them the freedom to express themselves openly. JR also


photographed former inmates and prison staff, collecting a total of 48 portraits and stories. Two weeks later, JR returned with his team to paste 338 strips of paper on the ground. In just a


few hours, the participants, equipped with push brooms and wallpaper glue, worked alongside guards and members of JR’s studio to complete the installation. From the prison yard, the image


was indiscernible, but from above, it revealed incarcerated people, former inmates, prison staff, and victims standing shoulder to shoulder. This naturally ephemeral installation disappeared


in three days under the footsteps of the prison’s population. aerial view of the complete pasting | image courtesy of JR Tehachapi, pasting in the courtyard | image by Marc Azoulay


Tehachapi, pasting in the courtyard | image by Jesse Clark inmates in the prison yard | image by Joshua Geyer